[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 10 (Wednesday, January 21, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S306-S307]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I thought last night, as the majority whip
just mentioned, that the President once again showed his sense of why
the majority in the Congress and the majority of people in the country
support the Keystone XL Pipeline. It is not just about the pipeline,
even though he doesn't quite seem ever to get that. It is about whether
we are going to truly take advantage of more American energy.
Clearly, the President suggested that was one of the great
accomplishments of his administration. I think we could make the
argument--and make it effectively--that his administration hasn't done
much to implement the great steps we have made forward. In fact, on
public lands and other measures that we were in the process of
considering when he became President,
[[Page S307]]
they have backed away from that rather than stepped forward.
We seem to be unwilling to step forward and embrace this great
opportunity that is so much more than the jobs for just the pipeline
itself.
I filed two amendments today on the pipeline bill--the topic we are
talking about, the topic my good friend from North Dakota has done so
much to bring attention to since the day he arrived in the Senate.
It was 4 years ago, when the Keystone XL Pipeline application was
only 2 years old at the time. Now 6 years later, we are continuing to
miss an opportunity. It seems that on this topic, as once was said
about seeking a solution to the Middle East, we can't seem to miss an
opportunity to miss an opportunity.
But the two amendments I have filed deal with a couple of critical
issues that relate to our energy future and our infrastructure future.
One would be a community affordability amendment where we would have to
have a study to look at the impact that all of these EPA regulations
have on communities. These are EPA's unfunded mandates on communities,
where they tell communities they have to do things but really don't
give the community any idea how to pay for it.
The Presiding Officer and I are from two States that have many small
communities. Those small communities often have a water system, a sewer
system, and a storm water system, and the EPA comes in and says: Here
is what we want you to do--maybe not with one of those, maybe with all
of those--the air quality, the water quality.
I know the EPA has one regulation on water where the solution can't
cost more than 2 percent of the median income over a specific period of
time.
Now, 2 percent of your income, if you haven't been paying it for your
water bill, your sewer bill or your whatever bill--2 percent of your
income is taken right off the top of your income. It makes a difference
to most families, but at least there is a cap there. But you can have
that 2 percent on increasing the cost of the water system and another 2
or 4 or 5 percent on increasing the storm water system, and somebody
has to pay those bills.
What this amendment does is suggest that we figure out who is paying
those bills, what is a reasonable way to pay those bills, and how those
bills can be paid. We know on the Senate floor, and the President
knows, and the EAP knows who pays those bills and the people who have
access to those services. There is no mythical payee here. The person
who pays your utility bill is you, and if there is increased cost to
the utility system, that comes to you. The person who pays your water
bill is you.
So I believe we need to have a coordinated effort to see how those
projects impact communities, impact families, and understand how this
works.
So this amendment that I filed today directs the EPA to collaborate
with the National Academy of Public Administration to review existing
studies of costs associated with major EPA regulations. The amendment
also directs the administration to determine how different localities
can effectively fund these projects. The end result would be to come up
with a working definition of a phrase they use a lot--individual and
community affordability--but I can't find any evidence that this
phrase--individual and community affordability--really means anything.
The amendment I filed today has already been endorsed by the U.S.
Conference of Mayors, the National League of Cities, the National
Association of Counties, and the chamber of commerce in my hometown,
Springfield, MO.
The other amendment I am filing, submitted as a sense of the Senate,
is that the President's U.S.-China greenhouse gas amendment would be
looked at in a different way. This amendment is cosponsored by my
colleague from Oklahoma, Senator Inhofe. It talks about the agreement
negotiated between the President and the People's Republic of China
and, in fact, says this agreement really has no force and effect
because frankly, Mr. President, it already has no force and effect in
China. Of the two parties the President says have agreed to this, we
are the only one who would have to do anything. We think this is a bad
idea--Senator Inhofe and I--and I think others will join us. It is a
bad deal for our country, it is economically unfair, it is
environmentally irresponsible, and once again it produces exactly the
opposite result of what we would want.
First of all, I think the Constitution is pretty clear on agreements
negotiated between countries. There is a Senate role to be played. It
requires the advice and consent of the Senate. The Senate should insist
we do that job. Whether it is here or on any other agreements with
other countries, those agreements need to be consented to by the
Senate. It happens to say that in the Constitution.
These agreements, under this amendment, also would have to be
accompanied by actions that may be necessary to implement the
agreement, including what it costs to implement. The amendment says the
United States should not sign bilateral or other international
agreements on greenhouse gases that will cause serious economic harm to
the United States. It also says the United States should not agree to
any bilateral or international agreement imposing unequal greenhouse
gas commitments on the United States.
The reason I filed this amendment is simple. The agreement the
President unilaterally negotiated with China and announced last
November is a bad deal for workers and a bad deal for families, whether
those workers are in Missouri or Arkansas or anywhere else in the
country today. The agreement requires the United States to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions from 26 to 28 percent below the 2005 levels by
2025. It allows the Chinese to increase their emissions until 2030.
So last night the President said in his State of the Union Address
that the United States will double the pace at which we cut carbon
pollution and China committed for the first time to limiting their
emissions. Well, let's be very frank about that. The President is
actually right. He has agreed that we would double the pace, somewhere
around 26 to 28 percent below the 2005 levels in the near term, but the
Chinese have agreed actually to be allowed to increase their emissions
for another 15 years and then they would consider--they would
consider--reducing emissions after that. What this does is drive jobs
and opportunity to China and other countries that care a lot less about
what comes out of the smokestack than we do. We lose the jobs we
otherwise would have had. We try to solve a global problem on our own
even though we have made great strides already, some of which were
cost-effective, but they get less cost-effective all the time.
I am grateful my colleagues allowed me to have a few extra minutes. I
have filed these amendments, and we will be talking more about them and
the Keystone XL Pipeline issue over the next few days. I look forward
to having a vote on these amendments and the vote on the Keystone XL
Pipeline.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The assistant Democratic leader.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, it is my understanding that we are in
morning business and the minority is now entitled to 30 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
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